Ex-Votos 2 (English)
Ex-Votos (2)

Hung on a church wall or in a shrine, often near a specific Holy image, the Mexican ex-voto commemorates the miraculous cure or rescue of the donor. The ex-voto tradition, the offering of some object indicative of a healing or blessing, probably dates back to early Greece. The custom followed the Spanish to the New World, where these pictorial stories of divine aid were placed in newly built Mexican churches. During the eighteenth century, offerings of votive paintings were wholly confined to the upper classes, but with Mexico's independence from Spain, the use of the votive paintings spread to all social and economic classes.

Throughout the nineteenth century it was customary for the person who experienced the miracle to describe it to a village artisan who then translated it into the painting on tin. A nineteenth century ex-voto is an original yet often anonymous work of art. Each little story-painting, although a product of the artist's imagination and creativity, is primarily a public testimony of the donor's sincere faith and gratitude.